Tutorial details

- At first we have to do some brush settings. Select the brush tool and choose a hard, big brush.

- Open the brush dialog (Window / Dockable Dialogs / brushes) and set the spacing to 150%, so that brushes have a space between each other when they’re placed on the workspace.

2

For the brush tool, select the brush dynamics like in the image.

In GIMP 2.7+, choose:
- “Opacity” to “pressure” and “fade” and
- “Size” to “velocity”

So the brush becomes smaller the faster you paint.

3

In the next steps we will outline 3-4 paths.

- Let’s begin with the first path. Select the path tool. Click on some places in the image and change the curves at the points, but don’t merge the path because the points shall not become connected. Create a nice-looking curve.

4

Click on “Stroke path”, then select the option at the bottom and choose “emulate brush dynamics”.

5

- Create a new transparent layer.

- Click on “Stroke” in the “stroke path”-dialogue. Now there should be points that become smaller along the path.

6

- Create 2-3 more paths. For each path, reduce the brush scaling by about 1/3 (for instance, 1.00 for the second path and 0.5 for the third).

I created and outlined 3 different paths.

7

Now apply Filter / Motion Blur to the first path (use the values from the illustration). Make sure that “Blur outward” is disabled.

8

Repeat this for all your paths.

9

- Disable the background layer.
- Right-click in the layers dialog on the topmost path and select “New from Visible”.

10

- Select the topmost layer and open the Motion Blur again using Ctrl+Shift+F. This time, enable “Blur outward” and set the value to 140 or higher. Apply the filter.

- Make the background layer visible again by clicking the eye symbol in the layers dialog.